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Worth the Fall (Brew Ha Ha) Paperback – October 13, 2014
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- Print length286 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateOctober 13, 2014
- Dimensions5.5 x 0.72 x 8.5 inches
- ISBN-100692471448
- ISBN-13978-0692471449
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Product details
- Publisher : RogueGiraffe Books (October 13, 2014)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 286 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0692471448
- ISBN-13 : 978-0692471449
- Item Weight : 13 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 0.72 x 8.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #5,352,036 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #93,224 in Romantic Comedy (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Caitie Quinn used to be the pen name for Bria Quinlan. Unfortunately, Caitie came to an untimely death and Bria now writes the books along without her other personality.
RWA RITA award finalist and USA Today Best Seller Bria Quinlan writes books for teens that take hard topics and make you laugh through your tears. Some people call them issue books. Some people call them romantic comedies. Bria calls them what-life-looks-like.
She also writes Diet-Coke-Snort-Worthy Rom Coms about what it's like to be a girl and deal with crap and still look for love.
Her stories remind you that life is an adventure not to be ignored. You can contact her at www.briaquinlan.com OR on Twitter @briaquinlan.
Rep'd by Laird Lauren Macleod of the Clan.... Oh, wait. Of Strothman Agency.
RWA RITA award finalist and USA Today Best Seller Bria Quinlan writes Diet-Coke-Snort-Worthy Rom Coms about what it's like to be a girl and deal with crap and still look for love. She also writes books for teens that take hard topics and make you laugh through your tears. Some people call them issue books. Some people call them romantic comedies. Bria calls them what-life-looks-like.
Her stories remind you that life is an adventure not to be ignored. You can contact her at www.briaquinlan.com OR on Twitter @briaquinlan.
Rep'd by Laird Lauren Macleod of the Clan.... Oh, wait. Of Strothman Agency.
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First, I am okay with hot and sweaty. Ain't got no problems with the door-wide-open, hot-and-sweaty, down-and-dirty scenes. But I am also fine without them.
This book is funny. Nobody gets drunk and throws up (okay, a bit tipsy, no vomit), not bodily function "humor," no sexual innuendo humor. Just humorous situation comedy, humorous stream-of-consciousness meanderings, and some sweet and funny repartee.
I even love the cover.
Kasey is our heroine. She finds herself in predicaments. The first predicament we find her in is in the opening of the book where she is, well, being shown the figurative door by her live-in boyfriend. Well, almost live-in boyfriend. She has given up her apartment, moved the majority of her stuff into his apartment, but she loses her job and with her job she loses the live-in boyfriend who is concerned an unemployed Kasey won't pull her financial weight.
I don't want to ruin the fun and frivolity that follows, so I will just say it does, indeed, follow. Kasey happens to meet a wondrous group of people and she is blessed with a home, new friends, and a new place to hang out.
Anyway, loved the book. But I do have a few issues. Okay, Kasey doesn't want to be dependent on anybody ever again. Understandable. And the breakup is new and ever present on her mind. I get that. But she carries it to the exxxxxxxtreme and it gets a bit annoying. There is even a moment where she has a serious and relatively long stream of consciousness mental ramble where she nails it, how she is hypersensitive, there is a difference between being polite and being manipulative. But she keeps on with the prickly "you can't take care of ME!" 'tude that really needs to go away.
The second issue: proofing. There is a self-described unproofed excerpt that follows the completed book. I can only assume since the author put "unproofed" she knows proofing is an issue. And I will tell you if it weren't for the fact I was caught up in the book fairly early on, I would have figuratively thrown my Kindle across the room. Since I am too cheap to do that, I just delete books that are poorly proofed/edited from my account. I couldn't bring myself to do it in this case. She consistently and maddeningly puts the comma after conjunctions. "Where" and "were" are wrong more than once. People are walking through a "crowed." Compound adjectives are not hyphenated and in some places it makes for painting a very confusing mental picture of what is going on. And yes, before those of you who don't care about punctuation and such say it doesn't matter, it really does. Seeing a comma after a conjuction causes the reader to pause (at least the readers who know such things), and that is not what you want. And yes, misspelled words do matter. The author saying someone had a "schmear" campaign instead of a "smear" campaign literally brought a picture of someone spreading cream cheese over someone else to my mind. Again, not everybody cares, but if you do, you really do. A "palette" instead of a "palate" also can be jarring.
So I will stop dwelling on the technical part. Yes, the editing/proofing issues bothered me. But I still adored the book. Short, quick read. Fun and funny without being disgusting. A "clean" romance with no inspie undertones. A HFN, not an HEA. But still a good little story.
Worth The Fall was about newly single Kasey who has numerous mishaps befall her all while the (unbeknownst to her) hero, Max, witnesses it all. In the course of the first chapter she has lost her job, her crappy boyfriend dumps her because of it and she is subsequently kicked out of her apartment. Right away Kasey is a character I could connect with because the pitfalls that life throws at her were so oddly similar to mine. Kasey did pick herself up and dust herself off but it left her gun shy to expect good things to happen for her which, again, is something I relate to 100%. I love how determined she was to start fresh and do something outside the box to shake up her career.
Max is the adorably steadfast cop who aside from being her constant pseudo guardian, is friends with some of her newfound click so the two are thrown together several times. Max was such a great hero. He was stoic and strong but had a playful side that made him easy to love. The way he teased Kasey and the adorable nickname he gave her after a particularly embarrassing incident was hilarious and swoon worthy! Their romance isn't easy with Kasey being stubborn but Max was such a patient and caring man that their push & pull was delicious!
I fell in love with John and Sarah from The Last Single Girl and didn't think anyone could take their place in my heart with the story they had but Kasey and Max gave them a serious run for their money. SERIOUS! As is Caitie Quinn's M.O. this book was funny, witty and heart warming. I usually love me some steamy romance but every now and then (more so now as of late) I need something just purely clean and sweet. I get so jaded about sex and relationships sometimes and a good solid couple like this is just the thing to reassure me that it is worth the fall. (No pun intended) I really hope Quinn isn't finished with "The Brew" yet because I am still dying to know about another couple I have gotten to know throughout the series. The way she incorporates all her secondary characters in with the MC's is fluid and creates a wonderful dynamic in the story. I am so glad I stumbled onto her books because now I have a "Go-To" author I can count on when I need something sweet and endearing.
I more than loved this book. There is no one word that can describe exactly how much I loved it. From beginning to end there was no stopping. I didn't want to.
I loved the characters. I loved the relationships. I loved the friendships-new and old ones. I loved that brooding Max and Kasey didn't have that teenager fake electric feel or zaps. When there eyes locked they had a vision of riding off into the sunset. They were attracted to each other but didn't want to be.
I LOVED Kasey and her day to day 'troubles' << This is where things were entertaining. I loved that Mr. Brooding himself was always there. Max was so perfect. You had no clue what he was really thinking but as you saw what he did or would do those actions spoke wonders. MAX!!! He is the exact definition of brooding. He gave off the vibe of not caring but it's what he did, his follow through that shown different. I loved it, HIM!!! Everything he did, their fights, their talks. Of course neither of them wanting this. I loved when they argued. Seriously, their fights were the best.
I was happy and sated and thrilled while reading this and when I read the end...it made me sad. Sad because I enjoyed it so freaking much and it's over. I'll reread this again and again but I'll never get to read it for the first time again. There are only a very small group of books that I wish I could trap that feeling, the perfection, to mimic how i felt when I read it the first go round. Worth The Fall is in that group!
Please, I really want more Max and Kasey. I need it.
Top reviews from other countries

Sometimes the story felt a bit bogged down with too much information, too much going on. That said I’m glad I read this.




Another great book in this series
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